The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield Rob Atkinson Vice President and Director, Technology and...

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The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Rob Atkinson

Vice President and Director, Technology and New Economy Project

Progressive Policy Institute

www.ppionline.org

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

$501 (c) (3)

$Mission is to define and promote a ‘Third Way’ progressive politics for the Information Age

$An alternative to the liberal impulse to defend the bureaucratic status quo and the conservative bid to dismantle government

$Founded in 1989 by the Democratic Leadership Council

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

PPI=s Technology & New Economy Project$Mission: Educate policy makers about the New Economy, while designing and promoting policies that foster innovation, investment, and risk-taking.

$Reports: Computer & Encryption Export Controls; R&D Funding and Tax Credit; Net Taxation; Patent Reform; Digital Government; Internet Tax and Privacy, SPAM; Digital Signatures; Universal Service Reform; “Digital Divide”, Intellectual Property; Regional Skills Alliances; Workforce Development; Stem Cells; and New Economy Indexes.

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

PPI=s New Economy Task ForceCo-Chairs:Senate Democratic Leader Tom DaschleGateway Computer Chairman Ted Waitt

July, 2000 Report: 23 Legislative Recommendations to Boost Economic Growth in the New Economy

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

AThe Information Economy@ AThe Network Economy@

AThe Digital Economy@

AThe Knowledge Economy@AThe Risk Society@

AThe New Economy@

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

$A New Economy Has Emerged

$It Will Change The Nature And Practice Of Economic Development

$It Will Affect All Regions And Communities

$There’s No Going Back

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

The New Economy is a knowledge and idea-based economy where the keys to wealth and job creation are the extent to which ideas, innovation, and technology are imbedded in all sectors of the economy.

The question to ask is not “do we have ‘New Economy’ industries,” but rather, “are our industries New Economy?”

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

$Stable

$Hierarchical

$Mass Production

$Capital and Labor

$Lower Costs

$Go-it-alone Business Culture

$A Skill or Degree

OLD NEW

$Dynamic

$Networked

$Flexible Production

$Innovation and Knowledge

$Innovation, Quality, Speed $Alliances and Partnerships $Lifelong Learning

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Used five groups of indicators to measure how well places are adapting to the New Economy:

Knowledge Jobs Globalization Economic Dynamism Digital Economy Technological Innovation

Metropolitan New Economy Index

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Hartford

Rank

22

Overall New Economy Scores

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Overall Metropolitan New Economy Scores

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Hartford

Score Rank

46% 2

Managerial, Professional, and Technical Jobs

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Managerial, Professional & Technical Jobs

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Hartford

Rank

28

Workforce Education

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Workforce Education

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Export Focus of Manufacturing

Hartford

Rank

17

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Export Focus of Manufacturing

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

“Gazelle” Jobs

11Hartford

Rank

11

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

“Gazelle” Jobs

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Hartford

Rank

47

Job Churning

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Job Churning

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

New Publicly Traded Companies

Hartford

Rank

30

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

New Publicly Traded Companies

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Online Population

Hartford

Score Rank

40.9% 28

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Online Population

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Broadband Telecommunications Capacity

42

Hartford

Rank

42

Springfield 51

Providers Per

Zip Code

2.11

1.43

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Broadband Telecommunications Capacity

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Technology in Schools

42

Hartford

Rank

32

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Technology in Schools

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Commercial Internet Domain Names

Hartford

Rank

35

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Commercial Internet Domain Names

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Internet Backbone

Hartford

Rank

27

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Internet Backbone

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

High-Tech Jobs

Hartford

Score Rank

3.1% 24

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

High-Tech Jobs

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Scientists and Engineers

Hartford

Rank

9

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Scientists and Engineers

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Patents

Hartford

Rank

12

Springfield 18

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Patents

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Academic Research and Development Funding

Hartford

Rank

23

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Academic Research and Development Funding

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Venture Capital

Hartford

Rank

28

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Venture Capital

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

A New Economy Requires a New Economic Policy

OLD ECONOMY MODEL

Get Big

Get Cheap

NEW ECONOMYMODEL

Get Prosperous

Get Better

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Getting cheap meant trying to get more jobs and companies even if: - the jobs were bad, and - the region was choking from growth (high housing prices, air pollution, shortage of workers, traffic gridlock)

The Old Economy Model: Getting Big

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Getting cheap meant tax holidays, big subsidies and other giveaways to companies that only cared about cost.

The result were low wage jobs and companies that were just as likely to leave after a decade for even cheaper pastures.

For example, almost half the jobs of companies in one Midwestern city that got tax subsidies paid less than 8$ per hour.

The Old Economy Model: Getting Cheap

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Getting prosperous means focusing on creating jobs with higher wages and better working conditions, reducing poverty and increasing economic opportunities for all of the region’s citizens.

The New Economy Model: Getting Prosperous

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Getting better means boosting the skills of the region’s workforce, ensuring a technologically advanced infrastructure, fast and responsive government, and ensuring a high quality of life that will be attractive to knowledge workers.

The New Economy Model: Getting Better

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Support Industry-led Regional Skills Alliances.

What to Do (1): Help companies get skilled workers.

Use the flexibility inherent in the Workforce Investment Act to create a true workforce development system linked to the private sector.

Identify industry skill needs and craft university and college curricula to meet those needs.

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

High quality universities, especially in science and engineering.

What to Do (2): Help Companies Access Technology

Create/expand R&D tax credits.

Help companies in traditional industries adopt and use new technologies.

Univ. Tech Commercialization: restructure intellectual property rules, rules regarding equity positions, and funding for seed capital.

Industry-Univ. Research Partnerships.

51The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Building a Tech-Based Economy Does Not Happen Overnight

•Example, Worcester, Massachusetts as bio-tech cluster.

•State begin effort in 1985: – One of 4 “centers of excellence”– Development of Massachusetts Biotechnology Park – Massachusetts Biotechnology Research Institute to provide technical assistance for start‑ups – Funding for development of biotechnology education curricula at secondary schools, community colleges and four‑year institutions – “Steered recruitment” of major biotech corporations

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Take the time to identify your region’s business and civic culture.

What to Do (3): Foster a Climate of Innovation

Public programs should work with clusters of firms whenever possible.

Support Industry-led technology councils.

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Assess your e-commerce readiness (e.g., www.ecom‑ohio.org)

What to Do (4): Encourage a Robust IT Infrastructure

Foster cross-jurisdictional digital government.

Encourage Internet access in public places (schools, community centers, etc.).

Support deployment of advanced telecommunications infrastructures (e.g., ‘data hotels’, wireless receivers, fiber optic cable).

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Smart Growth and Open Space

What to Do (5): Boost Quality of Life

Safety/Crime Reduction

New Economy Culture/Recreation

Traffic Mobility

High Quality K-12 Schools

55The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Regions Can Reduce Traffic Congestion

•Expand Highways (since 1978 highway and street miles up 1%, VMT up 70 %. No wonder roads are congested). •Institute “HOT Lanes”•Collaborate in Regional Transportation Authorities•Invest in Intelligent Transportation Systems

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Reinvent and Digitize Government

What to Do (6): Foster New Economy Governance

Establish Public-Private Councils (e.g., Joint Venture Silicon Valley)

Think and Act Like A Region, including fostering Metropolitan-Wide Governance, and Developing Regional Economic Development Strategies

57The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

IMPLICATIONS FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: I

•New industries, Especially trades services and e-businesses, are becoming more important

•All regions are becoming global

•Most industries and firms, are organizing work around technology

•Entrepreneurial “Growth-From-Within” is driving development

58The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

• Successful regions will focus on fostering innovation and quality – for business and residents.

• Alliances of all kinds will be central to driving change (e.g., Business Clusters; Industry-Government; Industry-Higher education).

• High priced business recruitment giveaways are not the answer.

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

Metropolitan regions that meet the challenges of the New Economy focusing on innovation, learning, and constant adaptation C will be the ones that succeed and prosper.

The New Economy in Hartford and Springfield

WWW.PPIONLINE.ORG

(“New Economy Project” “Mapping the New

Economy”)

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